PromptCat Issues for Acquisitions: Quality Review, Cost Analysis and Workflow Implications
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Date
1996
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Abstract
PromptCat is a new service offered by OCLC, in conjunction with monograph materials vendors, that provides libraries with a full bibliographic record from the OCLC Online Union Catalog (OLUC) simultaneous to the supply of materials from a vendor. The library's holdings are set automatically on the OLUC record. Because PromptCat eliminates the need for libraries to do individual title-by-title searching and record selection when materials are received, it will streamline local cataloging activities. It may also provide an impetus for libraries to reevaluate local editing practices and determine whether materials can be processed quickly upon receipt in acquisitions rather than in copy cataloging.
This article addresses issues relating to PromptCat, including tests of the service conducted at The Ohio State University (OSU) and Michigan State University (MSU), an estimated cost/benefit analysis based on OSU's approval plan, and issues including coordination between OCLC, materials vendors, system vendors, and the library as well as workflow, organizational implications and staffing issues.
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Keywords
PromptCat, OCLC, outsourcing cataloging
Citation
Mary M. Rider and Marsha Hamilton, "PromptCat Issues for Acquisitions: Quality Review, Cost Analysis and Workflow Implications," Library Acquisitions: Practice & Theory 20, issue 1 (1996): 9-21.